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Fiela's Child

Part of the Phoenix Fiction S. series
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Set in nineteenth-century rural Africa, Fiela's Child tells the gripping story of Fiela Komoetie and a white, three-year old child, Benjamin, whom she finds crying on her doorstep.

For nine years Fiela raises Benjamin as one of her own children.

But when census takers discover Benjamin, they send him to an illiterate white family of woodcutters who claim him as their son.

What follows is Benjamin's search for his identity and the fundamental changes affecting the white and black families who claim him. "Everything a novel can be: convincing, thought-provoking, upsetting, unforgettable, and timeless." Grace Ingoldby, New Statesman "Fiela's Child is a parade that broadens and humanizes our understanding of the conflicts still affecting South Africa today." Francis Levy, New York Times Book Review "A powerful creation of time and place with dark threads of destiny and oppression and its roots in the almost Biblical soil of a storyteller's art." Christopher Wordsworth, The Guardian "The characters in the novel live and breathe; and the landscape is so brightly painted that the trees, birds, elephants, and rivers of old South Africa are characters themselves.

A book not to miss." Kirkus Reviews "

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Product Details
University of Chicago Press
0226510832 / 9780226510835
Paperback
823
31/12/1986
United States
360 pages, 1 map
132 x 203 mm, 384 grams
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